Showing posts with label under the influence. Show all posts
Showing posts with label under the influence. Show all posts

Thursday, 26 May 2011

On Nina Simone, Powerful Singer and Civil Rights Leader

By Mole333

Music and activism have always gone together. And the Civil Rights era is a perfect example of this. Sometimes I get into a particular musician or song and highlight it and its political context...Woodie Guthrie, Bruce Springsteen and Israel 'IZ' Kamakawiwo'ole are among my previous musicians to focus on. All of them activists and progressives in their own ways.

Perhaps surprisingly I had never heard of Nina Simone until I hung out for awhile in a rather odd wine bar near the downtown NYU campus called the Bourgeois Pig where I found some good wine and music that included a fair amount of one of my favorites--Tom Waits. But there was also a powerful woman singer that was also featured on their musical tracks...someone I discovered was Nina Simone. I used to hang out there reading scientific papers over some wine and enjoying the music in the background. The sound of her voice was powerful, almost overwhelming. And the pairing with Tom Waits as the main background music for the place was amazing.

Nina Simone, born in 1933, wanted to be the first black woman concert pianist. THAT was the level of her ambition. Needless to say, back in the first 2/3 of the 20th century the chances of that were about nil. America in those days couldn't recognize a black woman as even remotely fitting the image of a concert pianist. But of course America was willing to recognize a black woman as a blues or jazz singer. So that is the path Nina Simone took. One of her early successes was "I Love you Porgy" from Gershwin's Porgy and Bess:

Young and with a voice that blows you away, she was perfect for this kind of song (not my favorite style but I like it when delivered so well...similar with Janis Joplin's version of Summertime). She could have followed a massively successful career as a black singer following this style of music, but she was to strong for that. She saw what was going on around her in America and she could not silence her voice calling for change.

The murder of Medgar Evers in Jackson, Mississippi and the white supremacist terrorist bombing of the 16th Street Baptist Church on 15 September 1963 in Birmingham, Alabama got Nina Simone pissed off, and she turned her powerful voice towards civil rights. In response to the murder of Medgar Evers and the bombing of the Baptist church she brought out the very harsh song "Mississippi Goddamn". Here is an early version of it:

A somewhat later version which I like because you can really see her emotions:

She regretted this song later in life because it hurt her career, but at the time, it was a raw emotional reaction to the violent attack at the time to the demand of blacks to be equal. I find it sad that she regretted it. It was important that strong voices like hers challenged the KKK killings that were all too common at the time, and it is BECAUSE people like her publicly challenged them that things started to change.

Nina Simone sang in many Civil Rights era events, perhaps a more sophisticated version of Woodie Guthrie's role in the early union movement.

"How it Feels to be Free":

Here she is singing an older song about lynchings in the South called "Strange Fruit": (warning: video includes disturbing pictures of lynchings)

A disturbing reminder of what America has represented. We have gotten beyond this in many ways, but we cannot deny its disgusting place in our history. And we cannot forget that this kind of violence, whether perpetrated against blacks, immigrants, or gays, still continues in America. I remember in my college days in San Diego, CA, there were beheadings of undocumented immigrants by the local KKK...the images and the idea is disturbing, but we cannot forget them because they are not so far from us.

Here's an interesting (and in my mind slightly incongruous) version of Nina Simone singing "Don't Let me be Misunderstood" in the context of key images from the Civil Rights movement:

And here is Nina Simone singing "Young Gifted and Black," a song which which Aretha Franklin popularized:

She has a song that reaches deep into the psyche of black women, a song called "Four Women" which describes four stereotypes of black women:

And let me just say, almost as an aside, that this is quite a turn around on the "House of the Rising Sun":

Nina Simone left the US because of the hostile environment (settling in Barbados where, in keeping with her strong and interesting personality, she had a lengthy affair with the Prime Minister!). It seems later in life she became disillusioned both with activism and with the United States. I wish I could have the video, but all I can do is link to it here, where she discusses, with some cynicism, her career and the state of the American Civil Rights movement in 1985.

Eventually she settled in France, where she died of breast cancer in 2003.

And let me end with a song that, by the end of her life, she may not have believed in, but I do..."The Times They Are A'Changing". To me, with all my study of history, I believe that change is often very, very slow, but it is still happening, moving, progressing. And you and I are a part of it.

Monday, 18 January 2010

Bill Hicks...with the Fonkees


...for ONE NIGHT ONLY by POPULAR DEMAND here's Bill LIVE ON STAGE with the Fonkees in a mashed up musical mojo meditation with the Fonkees in a thrills n spills rollercoaster ride through the innerspace of Generation Hicks. Heeere's Bill...
Bill Hicks...with the Fonkees ...anotherFONKEEjoint...
...featuring Mandatory Marijuana, Drugs and Music, Suck Satan's Cock, Play from Your Fucking Heart, Marketing, Drugs and Evolution, Positive Drug Story and more...

...anotherFONKEEjoint...

Sunday, 11 October 2009

the Messengers


...Some artists are defined by their environment. Some redefine their environment. Still others push the boundaries of convention so fully that their influence is felt around the globe, and across generations. Their music compels us not only to dance but to think, not only to celebrate but to strive, not only to listen but to truly hear. Fela Kuti, Nigeria’s eminent musical activist; Bob Marley, Jamaica’s emissary of struggle and unity; and Bob Dylan, America’s reluctant Civil Rights song leader, are three such artists.

These are “The Messengers.”

Today, August 18, 2009, acclaimed DJ/Producer, J.Period, and rising Somali-born MC, K’NAAN, are pleased to announce a unique and powerful remix project, paying tribute to the lasting legacy of these musical giants. Weaving afro-beat, reggae, ska, folk music and rock into this genre-bending musical experience, The Messengers stretches the boundaries of hip hop—and the mixtape genre itself. Remixing the classic work of Fela, Marley and Dylan, The Messengers captures the timelessness of their sounds and the continued urgency of their messages. The result, as fans have come to expect from J.Period, is like no mixtape you’ve ever heard. The Messengers has racked up over 85,000 downloads/plays in only a few short weeks online, making this mixtape a bonafide phenomenon. The Messengers is already being called “one of the year’s best albums or mixtapes” by top hip hop journalists, including HipHopDX.com.

Friday, 5 June 2009

Sonic Youth vs Dinosaur Jr

...HUGE excitement here at da filter, we got TWO NEW PRE-RELEASE downloads for ya, still haven't heard em myself yet, but they're on the way, just wanna SHARE the BOOTY, anyway, here's the blurb and the links...

Sonic Youth, who ended their 18-year partnership with Geffen Records last year to join New York indie label Matador, seem to be taking advantage of their new label's notoriously hands-off attitude: "[It has] heavy ass weirdo hooks," guitarist/vocalist Thurston Moore told Billboard.com of the group's yet-to-be titled 16th album, expected to drop this summer.

"We're super inspired to make a fresh start. We're glad to be dealing with a label that loves songs," Moore said of Matador. However, the rocker confirmed "we're still Sonic Youth -- I still don't know how to play the guitar."

...DOWNLOAD HERE...

If “Beyond” was Dinosaur Jr’s return to form, “Farm” is proof that this band continues to deliver rock worth cranking to 11. At times wholly 70’s guitar-epic, at other times perfect for sitting by a babbling brook with Joni and Neil, “Farm” encompasses Dinosaur Jr.’s signature palette - soaring and distorted guitar, unshakable hooks, honey-rich melodies, with songs that get into your head and, bouncing around happily, stay there.

The ear-catching “Plans” is nearly 7 minutes of classic whipped-topping rock dessert, whilst “I Don’t Wanna Go There” is a meat-and-potatoes main dish, mixing unapologetic lead guitar with straight-ahead delivery a la James Gang or Humble Pie. These two tunes round out twelve tracks propelled by the unique energy of one of America’s greatest living rock bands hitting their stride.

...DOWNLOAD HERE...

...just arrived, mmmmm, CRANK IT UP!...

Sunday, 17 May 2009

Dark Night of the Soul

...is the new album you can't buy for love nor money by Dangermouse and Sparklehorse, shelved in their infinite wisdom by EMI (probably 'cos the guestlist on this one is too expensive to license) but available for FREE download HERE on rfsMojofilter. You CAN buy the packaging for this which is a photobook by David Lynch and a blank cd to "use as you will" HERE but HEY, what's REALLY goin on here? - "official" story HERE...
...we all know Dangermouse burst on to the scene with the greatest rock n roll crime of the century, a cute and clever mashup of the litigious beatles and omnipresent jay-z, the GREY album available HERE, which led to both big dollar jobs for the Gorillaz and scientologist Beck and undoubtably helped sales of his many solo and collaboratory projects, and now we're supposed to believe the man's best album since his first (it Is that good) Is NOT gonna get an official release... but don't fret boys and girls 'cos radio station NPR is conveniently streaming the whole 13 tracks in their entirety HERE, and you can download it virtually anywhere by now via a viral marketing campaign that LOOKS like piracy but feels a little sleazy...sounds like a whole load of hocus pocus to sell a fifty dollar photobook or a ten dollar poster (with blank cd lest we forget).
Having got that off my chest, let me just repeat, this album is GOOD, not good like in gnarls barkley good, but good as in may actually be GREAT...just LOOK at this rolecall - Wayne Coyne - Gruff Rhys - Julian Casablancas - Black Francis - Iggy Pop - Nina Persson - VIC CHESNUTT fer chrissakes!...
...download it rip it stream it buy the book buy the poster see the installation smell the glove whatever...

...by Pancho Be Gubbins...

Monday, 20 April 2009

Dark Days Light Years

...EXCLUSIVE!!! (well almost) footage of the making of the album, DARK DAYS LIGHT YEARS, available for ONE WEEK ONLY...

...WORLD PREMIERE: With in-studio performance footage and endearingly inscrutable interview segments, this 48-minute special delves deep into Dark Days, Light Years , the new album from veteran Wales weirdos Super Furry Animals...

Monday, 13 April 2009

Dark Days, Light Years

...is the new album by those Super Furry Animals and it's a sparkling return to form binaural assault Under the Influence of which we bring you an essential torrent HERE...

...stand out tracks (so far) are the opener (and single) Crazy Naked Girls, a lo-fi hi-fi sci-fry groove from the planet venus that just cooks and boils, the Best of Neil Diamond (i've been saying he's long overdue a rennaissance), and the beautiful Liwiau Llachar, this albums welsh singalong...
...buy album HERE...

Friday, 27 March 2009

Sun Ra - Space is the Place (1972)

...ahh, Sun Ra and His Intergalactic Solar Arkestra, a beautiful album from a beautiful man, we're Under the Influence here at the rfsLounge of this album in particular and Sun Ra in toto...

...Sun Ra (born Herman Poole Blount, legal name Le Sony'r Ra[1]; May 22, 1914 in Birmingham, Alabama – May 30, 1993 in Birmingham, Alabama) was a jazz composer, bandleader, piano and synthesizer player, poet and philosopher known for his "cosmic philosophy", musical compositions and performances.

"Of all the jazz musicians, Sun Ra was probably the most controversial," critic Scott Yanow said,[2] due to Sun Ra's eclectic music and unorthodox lifestyle. Claiming that he was of the "Angel Race" and not from Earth, but from Saturn, Sun Ra developed a complex persona of "cosmic" philosophies and lyrical poetry that made him a pioneer of afrofuturism as he preached awareness and peace above all. He abandoned his birth name and took on the name and persona of Sun Ra (Ra being the ancient Egyptian god of the sun), and used several other names throughout his career, including Le Sonra and Sonny Lee.[3] Blount denied any connection with birth name, saying "That's an imaginary person, never existed … Any name that I use other than Ra is a pseudonym."[4]

...check out possibly the greatest blax-adelic over on rfsMojoTV, more info HERE and download the album HERE, or buy it HERE...

Thursday, 19 March 2009

All You Need Is...


...LOVE is the WORD here at rfsMOJOfilter, 'cos we're Under the Influence of the Beatles, and we've got a show here just full of it, from the originals and from George and Giles Martin's remixes, right through to Pete 'Best' Zarustica's radical re-imaginings, it's all here because of the WORD, lovingly re-produced for rfs...


...within you, without you, tomorrow never knows - the word - drive my car - get back - hey bulldog - everybody's got something to hide except me and my monkey - only a northern song - blaming madonna - nowhere man - i'm looking through you - i'm so tired - i'm only sleeping - revolution 23 - doctor robert - good morning good morning - good day sunshine - here comes the sun - getting better - got to get you under my knife - all you need is love - helleanor rigid - happiness is a warm gun - ticket to die - taxman - revolution - bomb together - because...

...anotherQUATILYproduct...

Monday, 16 March 2009

the Beatles - Love and Hate

...love 'em or loathe 'em, no-one here at the rfsLodge can deny we live Under the Influence of those lovable moptops from the 'pool, and as we've been in a bit of a beatles groove this week, here is a lovely tryptich of mash-up based Beatles goodies for you to download in anticipation of enrique's beatlemix coming soon to 'daFilter...

...The Beatles - Love...
...George Martin and his son Giles began work on Love after getting permission from Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, Yoko Ono, and Olivia Harrison (.[1] In discussing the project, Giles Martin noted that elements were utilized from recordings in The Beatles catalogue, "the original four tracks, eight tracks and two tracks and used this palette of sounds and music to create a soundbed."[1] George Martin also promised a prize to those who could crack a "code" found in the album.[2]...
...for torrent go HERE...

...The Beatles - Hate...
...The most expected release since the Black Album. After being asked by the remaining Beatles to make experimental remixes from their master tapes, Sir George Master Five and the former drummer Pete Best Zarustica spent 7 entire days planning this record, that for the first time in the fab-four history expresses HATE for the war, for the USA, and for everyone that supports this stupid act...
...for torrent go HERE...

...The Beatles - Hell...
...The Beatles' HELL comes to serve the world with classic tunes remixed for your listening pleasure. The Fab-Four poets of Limbo ? or Liverpool ? decided to pay a visit to HELL, like Prince William and loads of other soldiers who are still fighting this ludicrous war in the Middle-East. They took a ticket to ride in the same circles Dante described TR-708 years ago, but didn?t enjoyed it - in fact they regret it. Buy you can enjoy this trip (and it is a trip) downloading NOW their latest LP, The Beatles' HELL, yeah!...
...for torrent go HERE...

Sunday, 1 March 2009

Reds, Whites and Blues...


...hey man, we got WHITE STRIPE FEVER here on rfsMojofilter, with the latest offering from the CarpMeister, it's a non-stop ride thru the wilfully eclectic world of the white stripes vinyl collection, every track has been lovingly covered by jack n meg, compiled and annotated by the carpmeister and produced for rfs by enrique...

...symptoms...
1.T.V. Eye - The Stooges - Performed Live 2004
2.Conquest - Patti Page - recorded for album Icky Thump
3.I Just Don't Know What To Do With Myself - Tommy Hunt - recorded for Elephant - Jack White: "The recording we did of that is the best recording of a cover song we've ever done. It's really just a blues song in its purest form."
4.One More Cup Of Coffee - Bob Dylan - Covered on 1st Album
5.Grinnin' In Your Face - Son House - Played Live 2002 - Jack White: "I heard Son House singing [Grinning In Your Face] and it was as if someone, with a single blow of the axe, had opened up the world to me. After that, my life received meaning. I can lie in bed in the middle of the night and feel an ice-cold wind flowing through my body, which makes me start to shake uncontrollably. Then I have to get up and hear Charley Patton or Robert Johnson. The American South should be regarded as holy land by everyone. Everything which is worth anything comes from there."
6.Party Of Special Things To Do - Captain Beefheart - released on a single - Jack White: "I've heard the song from [the movie Blue Collar], yeah. For the single we did China Pig from Trout Mask Replica as an acoustic blues song, and on Ashtray Heart and Party of Special Things To Do we used different recording techniques, going straight into the board, with fuzz guitar and bass. That was the first time we've ever done that. When a song feels like it needs something, I just wanna have it there."
7.Rated X - Loretta Lynn - Recorded for B SIde of Hotel Yorba - Loretta Lynn: "My management called me and told me, and then they said, 'Did you not know that they have "Rated X" out also?' So somebody brought me the CD, and you know what? Jack done that song just like me. I was shocked! I said, 'He must be some Loretta Lynn fan to have recorded "Rated X."' He did a great job, just a great job."
8.Stop Breakin' Down Blues - Robert Johnson - Recorded for 1st Album - Jack White: "With Stop Breaking Down. You know, I'd heard 'Exile on Main Street' before but didn't own it and so had actually never heard the Rolling Stones version of Stop (laughs) until after our LP came out." "The reason we originally recorded [Stop Breaking Down] was because we were going to put it on the B-side of a single with The Big Three Killed My Baby, make it a whole anti-automotive 45. Then when we recorded it, it came out so good we figured we'd better put it on the album."
9.300 Pounds Of Joy - Howlin' Wolf - Performed Live 2003
10.For The Love Of Ivy - Gun Club - Performed Live 2002
11.My Little Red Book - Love - Performed Live 1998
12.Your Southern Can Is Mine - Blind Willie McTell - Closing Track On De Stijl Album.
13.Jolene - Dolly Parton - Released as a single - Jack White: "With Jolene by Dolly Parton, we've always loved country music. We wanted to do a country single with Dolly on one side and Loretta [Lynn] on the other. I first heard Dolly Parton a couple years ago, and couldn't believe what a good thing she had going at one point. Then I found out later that other bands had already covered that song. When I heard it - I heard that it was Dolly Parton's first single and I thought that was ah - big - ah - I don't want to say ballsy - just a courageous song for her to release as her first song - its in a minor key it kind of has this evil overtone - it comes back to me liking Loretta Lynn so much with that finger pointing at men kinda song - just layin it down the line for someone like that your really hurting my feelings - pretty interesting
14.Diddy Wah Diddy - Bo Diddley - Performed Live 1999/2004
15.After Hours - Velvet Underground - Performed live 2000 - Jack White: "Oh she's kind of shy about it - on New Years Eve when we played she sang for the first time we did 'after hours' by the Velvet Underground - that's the song that Mo Tucker sings - and she sang that and it was just great - the crowd really liked it and she was real nervous - it was great though"
16.Jack The Ripper - Screaming Lord Sutch - Performed Live
17.Boogie Chillin - John Lee Hooker - Perfomed Live 2001
18.Small Faces - Public Nuisance - Performed Live 2003 - Jack White: "That's relatively new... from 1968 or so! It's a band called Public Nuisance, from Los Angeles. They dressed completely in black and on record they sound like a mix between the Pretty Things and early Kinks. Excellent songs. One of the songs we must do a cover of is called 'Small Faces.'"
19.Death Letter Blues - Son House - Performed on the album De Stijl
20.Baby Please Dont Go - Muddy Waters - Performed Live 2003
21.Tennessee Border - Hank Williams - Recorded For ITUNES download for album Icky Thump
22.Everyday - Buddy Holly - Performed live 2003
23.Lord Send Me An Angel - Blind Willie McTell - Released as 7" - Jack White: "Yeah, it's hard for me to sing like that, about how great I am. One line goes, 'All these Georgia women won't let Willie McTell rest', and I change it to, 'All these Detroit women won't let Mr. Jack White rest.' To me, it's a joke, 'cos everybody who knows me knows that women don't like me that much! But I was toying with the idea that girls are attracted to cockiness, and bad, bad qualities in men. So I feel comfortable with that song, because it's true. Lying is the artistic way of telling the truth. I'm lying, saying, Look at me, look at this, I'm just telling you the truth - in reverse."
24.Farmer John - The Searchers - Played Live 2002
25.Carol - Chuck Berry - Performed live 2001
26.Baby Blue - Gene Vincent - Performed For John Peel - John Peel: "So we were talking about one of the great concerts of my life, when I saw Eddie Cochran and Gene Vincent play at the Liverpool Empire, four days before Eddie Cochran was killed in a car crash. When the White Stripes played that night, they ended their set with an Eddie Cochran song and a Gene Vincent song. And I thought, what a nice thing to do, but also incredibly cool. A British band couldn't do that -- they don't have that kind of flexibility."
27.Look Me Over Closely - Marlene Dietrich - B Side of Lets Shake Hands 7" - Jack White: "Even on our 1st EP we did our Marlene Dietrich song Look Me Over Closely on the B-side of 'Let's Shake Hands.' I had just bought the LP on a lark and loved that song. A cool '30s Broadway type thing. After that came out, I realized someone on Sympathy had already covered it."

...anotherQUATILYproduct...

Thursday, 13 November 2008

Mitch Mitchell R.I.P.

...STOP THE PRESS!!!...
under the influence of stax of hendrix vinyl, here's a tasty tribute

Monday, 19 May 2008

under the INFLUENCE...


...in the first of an occasional series on the essential and influential here at the rfs lounge, i strongly urge you to take a dose of TROPICALIA, torrent HERE
for your own minty fresh copy, go HERE

The Tropicália movement was born in 1968, a momentous year around the world. It was the year of the Martin Luther King and Bobby Kennedy assassinations, the Prague Spring, the Chicago Convention, the Tet Offensive in Vietnam and the anti-war movement, the student rebellion in France, civil rights, the beginning of the end for the Soviet Union and the birth of the women’s movement.

In Brazil, army violence that killed three protesters in the opening months of 1968 failed to keep students from protesting the four-year-old repressive Brazilian military dictatorship. It was against this extraordinary backdrop that Tropicália arrived. As a coherent movement allied to worldwide political and cultural unrest, Tropicália lasted little more than a year, yet it had – and continues to have – a profound effect on Brazilian society.

Mixing psychedelic rock, avant-garde musique concrete (tape loops, sound experiments), samba, funk and soul, Tropicália was so radical – and its social implications so politically profound - that its leading protagonists, Caetano Veloso and Gilberto Gil, were arrested, imprisoned and finally exiled in 1969.

Tropicália’s unique ideology mixed high art with mass culture. Tropicália created musical and cultural anarchy, a revolution in Brazilian sound with a legacy later to be internationally championed by such diverse artists as David Byrne, Beck, Kurt Cobain, Stereolab, The Bees and Tortoise.
Tropicália artists loved the Beatles and Jimi Hendrix. They loved such forgotten Brazilian musical radio heroes as Dorival Caymmi, Luis Gonzaga and Orlando Silva as much as they were interested in the avant-garde of John Cage and Stockhausen.